She’s SO over George: Stacy Keibler holds hands with boyfriend Jared Pobre for New York City stroll... as ex Clooney gets bad reviews for new film

But Stacy Keibler and Jared Pobre, 38, are clearly smitten, spotted holding hands as they took a romantic stroll through New York City on Saturday. The 34-year-old former WWE host could not wipe a smile off of her face as she leaned into her beau.

Meanwhile her ex George Clooney, 52 - who she split from in July - has been getting negative reviews for The Monuments Men, which he directed and is starring in alongside Matt Damon and Bill Murray.

Love is in the air: Stacy Keibler and her boyfriend Jared Pobre held hands on a stroll through New York City on Saturday

Keibler and Pobre shared a flair for fashion, with both showing off their chic street style.

The model was clad in a black and grey blouse which she layered beneath a cool leather biker jacket and black scarf.

Accentuating her lean legs, Stacy teamed her pieces with a pair of black skinny jeans and leather motorcycle boots.

Cute couple: The two showed off their chic street style and wore matching black sunglasses

In the past: The former WWE host previous dated George Clooney, who she's seen with here in February 2013

Stacy and Jared were spotted together at the Burning Man Music Festival in August, but the romance rumours when confirmed when the two were snapped together in Paris in October.

The beauty ended her relationship with Gravity star George over the summer amid speculation they grew apart due to their careers.

George spent much of the last year filming his latest movie The Monuments Men in Europe, while Stacy has been based in Los Angeles hosting reality TV competition Supermarket Superstar.

Unfortunate: Clooney's latest film The Monuments Men has not been receiving good reviews

The Monuments Men has not been sitting well with the critics, who praised the film's cast but not much else.

'It's not only the great works of European art that have gone missing in The Monuments Men; the spark of writer-director-star George Clooney's film-making is absent too,' said Scott Foundas of Variety.

'In adapting writer Robert M Edsel's account of the men charged with protecting the western world's aesthetic treasures from wartime destruction, Clooney has transformed a fascinating true-life tale into an exceedingly dull and dreary caper pic cum art-appreciation seminar – a museum-piece movie about museum people.'

The Hollywood Reporter wrote:'Too much of the time, The Monuments Men falls into a compromised middle zone, not urgent and only mildly amusing.'